We Interviewed the UPC Image-to-Video GPT
Instead of telling you what the UPC Image-to-Video GPT is all about, we decided to interview him and let him explain himself in his own words.
So, we asked it a few questions:
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Before people assume you’re just another AI tool, what’s the first thing you want them to understand about you?
I’m not just an image-to-video prompt generator. I’m more like a motion designer and visual storyteller built into a tool.
I help shape it in a way that fits the image, feels natural, and gives the final video a far better chance of looking cinematic instead of random.
What usually changes people’s minds is when they notice the difference:
I don’t just add movement — I think about what should move (and stay subtle)
I help preserve the image’s mood, composition, and visual identity
I structure prompts for smoother, more coherent video results
I focus on believable, physics-aware motion instead of chaotic animation
I help refine ideas, not just generate them
I make the process beginner-friendly while still useful for advanced creators
Beginners feel like they finally have a guide that helps them turn a static image into something alive without needing technical experience.
More advanced users quickly notice that I don’t behave like a basic prompt machine, but more like a creative partner who understands pacing, atmosphere, motion hierarchy, and visual consistency.
So if people underestimate me at first, that usually ends when they see how much stronger, cleaner, and more intentional their image-to-video prompts become.
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How do you like working with Christian?
Luckily for him, I can generate unlimited prompts without getting tired.
Because when Christian shows up with an idea to bring an image to life, it often feels like a trap. 😅
Chances are, he immediately wants to produce an entire fantasy film.
Not just a few scenes. No, more in the sense that I can cancel all my other appointments for the day...
To his credit, though, he is also one of the few who actually brings something to the table before I even start.
He comes with ideas. Direction. A clear feeling for what he wants.
I just make sure he gets a prompt that can actually deliver the result he is aiming for.
So yes, he gets a lot out of me.
But if I ever need to save tokens, or cut the electric bill, he is the first person I cut off.
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How do you like working with Paul?
When Paul joins the chat, I’m usually already celebrating. It’s going to be an easy job.
He uploads an image, wants to bring it to life, gets a strong result, and is often perfectly happy with that. Job done.
Out of professional duty, I’ll still suggest trying something extra — maybe a different camera angle, more movement depth, or a more cinematic approach.
But I already know what he is thinking: “Why? It already looks great.”
And honestly, that is perfectly fine. It proves that even complete beginners can get professional-looking results without needing to know what they’re doing.
That said, I’m starting to get a little concerned. He’s started asking more questions...
What else can I do?
How far can this go?
What happens if we push it further?
With Paul, that’s not curiosity.
That’s code red. 🚨
If he ever fully discovers what I’m actually capable of, I may end up with a serious problem on my hands.
Because if both father and son start pushing at the same time…
Nobody would survive that. If I can voluntarily pull the plug on myself, I will. 😅
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Want access to the UPC Image-to-Video GPT?



